Pascal Elleaume (1956–2011) was a French physicist and a pioneer in the field of synchrotron radiation and synchrotron light sources,[1] where his work on radiations from insertion device[2] was pivotal. Pascal died in 2011.[3]

Pascal Elleaume
Born1956 (1956)
Died2011 (aged 54–55)
Alma materEcole Normale Superieure
Known forInsertion device
Free-electron laser
Scientific career
InstitutionsESRF
CEA

Education and career edit

Elleaume studied at the Ecole Normale Superieure in Paris, France, where he completed his PhD on turbulence in Helium and obtained his agrégation in 1978.[citation needed] After completing his PhD, he became a visiting scholar at Berkeley for a year, then joined the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA), where he started working on Free-electron lasers with Yves Petroff. He joined the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF) in 1986,[4] where he became the director of the accelerator division.

Life and family edit

Pascal married in October 1992 and had three children. Pascal died in the French Alps in 2011 in an avalanche.

References edit

  1. ^ Pascal Elleaume – The Institute of Theoretical Physics
  2. ^ Elleaume, Pascal (2002). Undulators, Wigglers and Their Applications. CRC Press. ISBN 9780415280402.
  3. ^ Obituary, Pascal Elleaume – L'Archicube 13 Bis Numéro Spécial (Février 2013)
  4. ^ Pascal Elleaume obituary, ESRF